Canadian Stuff

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

As the inquiry into the federal government's decision to use the Emergencies Act during the 'Freedom Convoy' protests nears the finish line, a new survey has found that two in three Canadians say they support, at least to some degree, the invocation of the Act.

More than 1,000 Canadians were asked about their thoughts on the Emergencies Act in a survey conducted by Nanos Research in the days after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took the stand at the inquiry. Of the respondents, 48 per cent said they support the use of the Emergencies Act, while 18 per cent said they somewhat support the decision.

In addition, 23 per cent said they oppose the use of the Act and seven per cent said they somewhat oppose it.

Support for the use of the Emergencies Act was highest in Atlantic Canada, where 74.6 per cent indicated they support or somewhat support the decision. This was followed by Quebec, where 73.4 per cent said they at least somewhat support the use of the Act.

The strongest opposition to the use of the Act was in the Prairies, where 43.7 per cent said they oppose or somewhat oppose the measure. Canadians aged 55 or older were also more likely to support or somewhat support the use of the Act compared to younger Canadians between the ages of 18 and 35.

When asked about which groups Canadians felt they had the worst impressions of due to the federal inquiry, 46 per cent identified the convoy protesters, while 23 per cent said the federal government. In addition, eight per cent said the Ontario government, while 10 per cent said they have a negative impression of all of these groups.

As well, 40 per cent said the inquiry left them with the best impression of the federal government and 13 per cent said they had the most positive impression of the protesters, while 25 per cent said they were unsure.
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canibus447

Well-Known Member

As the inquiry into the federal government's decision to use the Emergencies Act during the 'Freedom Convoy' protests nears the finish line, a new survey has found that two in three Canadians say they support, at least to some degree, the invocation of the Act.

More than 1,000 Canadians were asked about their thoughts on the Emergencies Act in a survey conducted by Nanos Research in the days after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took the stand at the inquiry. Of the respondents, 48 per cent said they support the use of the Emergencies Act, while 18 per cent said they somewhat support the decision.

In addition, 23 per cent said they oppose the use of the Act and seven per cent said they somewhat oppose it.

Support for the use of the Emergencies Act was highest in Atlantic Canada, where 74.6 per cent indicated they support or somewhat support the decision. This was followed by Quebec, where 73.4 per cent said they at least somewhat support the use of the Act.

The strongest opposition to the use of the Act was in the Prairies, where 43.7 per cent said they oppose or somewhat oppose the measure. Canadians aged 55 or older were also more likely to support or somewhat support the use of the Act compared to younger Canadians between the ages of 18 and 35.

When asked about which groups Canadians felt they had the worst impressions of due to the federal inquiry, 46 per cent identified the convoy protesters, while 23 per cent said the federal government. In addition, eight per cent said the Ontario government, while 10 per cent said they have a negative impression of all of these groups.

As well, 40 per cent said the inquiry left them with the best impression of the federal government and 13 per cent said they had the most positive impression of the protesters, while 25 per cent said they were unsure.
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Wow a full 1000 Canadians! Talk about enlightening! The people have spoken!

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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Wow a full 1000 Canadians! Talk about enlightening! The people have spoken!

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One is an actual poll and the other was a twitter poll conducted by someone with an axe to grind and Twitter followers. The properly conducted poll means something, the Twitter poll is meaningless and loaded with bots and trolls skewing the results, it was not random, it was highly selective. Polling companies conduct polls to get a true picture of reality, they are useless to serious people if they do not. This poll is worse than Elon's asking if Trump should come back on Twitter FFS, former Twitter employees say such polls are a joke.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Wow a full 1000 Canadians! Talk about enlightening! The people have spoken!

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Most of the mask and vaccine stuff is under provincial control, public health is a provincial and local responsibility under the constitution. The federal government controls borders and interprovincial trade, airlines, railways, canals, shipping and trucks, internationally or interprovincially operating. Most of these idiots were so ignorant of basic civics that they still haven't gotten it through their thick skulls that their beef was with DoFo more than Justin. By the time these idiots were shutting down Ottawa policy was already changing internationally and in Canada due to viral mutations making it too difficult to control with lockdowns and such. These changes were underway before these idiots arrived in Ottawa on their ill-informed and misguided adventure, though Americans did pay for a lot of the party. The decisions were driven by the evolving nature of the virus, vaccines and the expert opinion of scientists, these clowns were not helpful and are paying the price.
 
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